Remember Who You Are
Deep in meditation, I received an insight that stopped me in my tracks.
The message was so simple, yet so profound, that I have been reflecting on it ever since.
Since returning from the Modern Mystery School headquarters, my focus has become even clearer: how can I be of greater service?
Each year I travel to deepen my training, gather new teachings, and recommit to the work that I bring back to my community in Hobart and beyond. In this pursuit, I train in many modalities and qualify to teach many subjects. All of them are valuable. All of them have their place.
Yet sometimes, when there are so many wonderful teachings, practices, and opportunities for growth, it is easy to forget the one key that unlocks them all.
Long ago, King Salomon taught that for humanity to evolve, we would need to remember.
Remember what?
Deep in meditation, I asked a simple question:
What is the key message people need in order to transform their lives?
The answer came immediately.
Remember who you are.
So simple.
Yet so profound.
My Own Journey
This question lies at the very heart of my own transformation.
Years ago, I was not asking, "Who am I?"
I assumed I already knew.
Like many people, I spent years striving toward what I believed success should look like. A good career. Financial stability. Achievement. Recognition. The next goal. The next milestone.
From the outside, it all seemed sensible.
From the inside, life often felt chaotic.
I overcommitted myself. I said yes too often. I took on responsibilities that were not mine to carry. I poured energy into helping others while becoming increasingly disconnected from myself.
And so, I fell flat more than once.
Each time I picked myself up, I changed direction.
Perhaps I needed a different job.
Perhaps I needed a different goal.
Perhaps I needed a different environment.
Yet somehow the same pattern kept repeating.
What I did not understand at the time was that I had no real understanding of who I was.
Without knowing who I was, how could I possibly know what I was here to achieve?
All I knew was that I needed to keep achieving.
Eventually, after decades of running the same pattern, I reached a point where I could no longer ignore the deeper question.
I made a promise.
"I am going to find myself."
It felt like throwing my hands up to God and saying:
"I give up. Show me the way."
That promise eventually led me to receive a Life Activation.
The day I received it, I found myself sitting alone in a small Italian restaurant in London.
Something had shifted.
For the first time in my life, I felt truly awake.
The closest comparison I can give is this: imagine standing in a shower room thick with steam, where everything is blurred and difficult to see. Then suddenly a rush of fresh air sweeps through, clearing the room. What moments before was hazy becomes crisp and visible.
That was how I felt.
Clear.
Present.
Awake.
With my journal open on the table, I began writing.
The words came effortlessly: "Today my life changes."
Seven years later, looking back on that moment, I can honestly say it was one of the truest things I have ever written.
Not because all my problems disappeared overnight.
Not because I suddenly had all the answers.
But because that day marked the beginning of a different journey.
Instead of searching for something outside myself, I began the path of remembering who I truly am.
But Who Are You?
At first glance, it seems like a strange question.
Who am I?
Of course, I know who I am.
I am me.
Or do we simply know who we have been told we are?
From the moment we are born, we begin collecting beliefs about ourselves.
Our family shapes us.
Our culture shapes us.
Our experiences shape us.
We learn what is acceptable. What is expected. What earns approval. What keeps us safe.
Perhaps you grew up in a household where rules and discipline were everything. You may have rebelled against those rules as an adult, yet the voices that shaped you still live quietly within your belief system.
Perhaps you grew up moving between separated parents, learning to adapt your personality depending on whose house you were in. Over time, you became so skilled at adjusting yourself to others that you began second-guessing your own thoughts, words, and decisions.
These adaptations are normal.
They help us survive.
But survival is not necessarily the same as knowing who we are.
Over time, our identity becomes layered with expectations, fears, stories, and assumptions.
And eventually, we stop asking:
Is this really me?
What Forgetting Looks Like
For many people, forgetting who they are does not look dramatic.
It looks ordinary.
It looks like staying in a job that drains your spirit.
It looks like shrinking yourself to make other people comfortable.
It looks like accepting less than you deserve.
It looks like speaking harshly to yourself.
It looks like living from fear rather than purpose.
It looks like knowing there is something more within you, yet never quite reaching for it.
Many of us spend years trying to improve our circumstances without realizing that the deeper invitation is to remember ourselves.
The Great Forgetting
King Salomon taught that humanity is born into a state of forgetting.
That when we enter the physical world, we forget our true origins.
We forget our divinity.
We forget our connection to God.
We forget the greatness that exists within us.
And perhaps the purpose of life is not to become something new.
Perhaps it is to remember what has always been there.
You already know this process.
You have lived it.
You have faced challenges.
You have endured difficulties.
You have fallen into dark places and somehow found the strength to rise again.
Every challenge offers an opportunity for growth.
Every obstacle presents a lesson.
Every experience invites us to remember more of who we truly are.
We are not here merely to survive.
We are here to overcome.
To grow.
To transform.
To remember.
Why Remembering Matters
Remembering who we are changes everything.
When we release false beliefs and limiting stories, we become free to express more of our authentic nature.
Looking back, I can see that my desire to achieve was not wrong.
Achievement is part of who I am.
Service is part of who I am.
Growth is part of who I am.
The problem was not the desire.
The problem was that I was disconnected from its source.
Without that connection, I chased things that could never truly fulfill me.
Today, through my daily spiritual practice and connection with my Higher Self, I experience life very differently.
I still have goals.
I still face challenges.
I still encounter obstacles.
But now I approach them from a place of connection rather than confusion.
I understand my purpose more deeply.
I understand what I am building and why.
And when life presents a challenge, I seek guidance from a higher perspective rather than blindly trying to force my way forward.
Purpose is not static.
As we grow, our purpose grows with us.
As we evolve, our capacity to serve evolves too.
This is why Know Thyself is so important.
To know ourselves is to remember.
To remember is to transform.
The Path of Remembering
King Salomon understood both the greatness of humanity and the difficulty of remembering that greatness.
He understood that people need support, guidance, and tools.
And so, a system was preserved through lineage—a path of healings, teachings, and initiations designed to awaken human potential.
This is known as the Path of Know Thyself.
With each healing, each activation, each class, and each step forward, more of our true nature is revealed.
Not because something new is being added.
But because what was hidden is being uncovered.
The Light within becomes more visible.
The connection becomes stronger.
The remembrance becomes deeper.
This is why spiritual training matters.
Not because someone else has something you lack.
But because we all benefit from guides, teachers, and community as we walk the path.
No one climbs a mountain entirely alone.
Reclaiming Your Crown
The great masters understood something that many people still struggle to accept:
Human beings are extraordinary.
We are divine beings.
Yet so often we treat ourselves as second-rate.
We settle.
We doubt.
We diminish our own Light.
But there is a higher calling within every one of us.
You have felt it.
You may not be able to fully touch it yet, but you have felt its presence.
The quiet knowing that there is more.
The sense that you were born for a purpose.
The desire to contribute something meaningful to the world.
That voice is calling you to remember.
To remember your strength.
To remember your purpose.
To remember your connection to the Divine.
To remember who you truly are.
One person remembers.
Then another.
Then another.
And through that remembrance, the world changes.
One soul at a time.
No pressure. Just space to listen more closely.

